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(state flower) Dianthus caryophyllus: 1953 [50] Large white trillium (state wild flower) Trillium grandiflorum: 1987 [51] Oklahoma: Oklahoma rose (state flower) Rosa: 2004 [52] Indian blanket (state wildflower) Gaillardia pulchella: 1986 [52] Mistletoe (state floral emblem) Phoradendron leucarpum: 1893 [52] Oregon: Oregon grape: Berberis ...
Narcissus is a genus of perennial herbaceous bulbiferous geophytes, which die back after flowering to an underground storage bulb.They regrow in the following year from brown-skinned ovoid bulbs with pronounced necks, and reach heights of 5–80 centimetres (2.0–31.5 in) depending on the species.
Various common names including daffodil, narcissus, and jonquil are used to describe all or some members of the genus. The list of species is arranged by subgenus and section . Estimates of the number of species in Narcissus have varied widely, from anywhere between 16 and nearly 160, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] even in the modern era.
Narcissus jonquilla, commonly known as jonquil [3] or rush daffodil, is a bulbous flowering plant, a species of the genus Narcissus (daffodil) that is native to Spain and Portugal but has now become naturalised in many other regions: France, Italy, Turkey, the former Yugoslavia, Madeira, British Columbia in Canada, Utah, Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, and the southeastern United States from Texas ...
RHS horticultural divisions of daffodils; Number [6] Name [6] Definition [6] Cultivar Example [8] Code Year [notes 1] 1: Trumpet Daffodil cultivars: Solitary flower with corona as long as, or longer than the tepals 'Little Gem' 1Y–Y 1959 2: Large-cupped Daffodil cultivars: Solitary flower with corona more than one-third, but less than equal ...
The plant has naturalised throughout the eastern half of the United States and Canada, along with some western states and provinces. [31] Narcissus poeticus has long been hybridised with the wild British daffodil Narcissus pseudonarcissus, producing many named hybrids.
العربية; Asturianu; Беларуская; Català; Чӑвашла; Cebuano; Dansk; Deutsch; Eesti; Español; فارسی; Français; Galego; Bahasa Indonesia ...
The Oxford dictionaries only list this third form under American English, although the Cambridge Dictionary [65] allows of all three in the same order. However, Garner's Modern American Usage states that narcissi is the commonest form, narcissuses being excessively sibilant. [66] For similar reasons, Fowler prefers narcissi in British English ...